artists are a lot like gangsters. They both know that the official version, the one everyone else believes, is a lie.

Russell Banks

I can’t remember how many times I advised students to stop writing the sunny hours and write from where it hurts: “No one wants to read polite. It puts them to sleep.”

Anne Bernays

Some of the most thoughtful if not ingenious criticism written today is written by critics of film who, often as not, address themselves to work that is hardly worth their attention. The most meretricious or foolish movie will elicit a cogent analysis. Why? It may be a film’s auspices that obligate the critics. But it may be that, however unconsciously, they mean to reaffirm or defend print culture by subjecting the nonliterate filmgoing experience, good or bad, to the extensions of syntactical thought.

E.L. Doctorow

Most writers write too much. Some writers write way too much, gauged by the quality of their accumulated oeuvre.

Richard Ford

I keep aiming toward that novel that is just that, a true novel, but a novel for our time, dealing with an essential theme and an essential message in a subterranean, carefully hidden way, a message like a snake in the grass, as Trollope put it. There’ll be no boy meets tractor, nor even a professor meets sophomore.

Hans Koning

For the past 30 years the greatest novelists writing in English have been genre writers: John le Carré, George Higgins and Patrick O’Brian.

David Mamet

to write is to practice, with particular intensity and attentiveness, the art of reading. You write in order to read what you’ve written and see if it’s O.K. and, since of course it never is, to rewrite it ? once, twice, as many times as it takes to get it to be something you can bear to reread. You are your own first, maybe severest, reader. “To write is to sit in judgment on oneself,” Ibsen inscribed on the flyleaf of one of his books. Hard to imagine writing without rereading.